Times of Eswatini

Sanlam takes hit, warns of profit decline

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CAPE TOWN - Sanlam’s share price fell by more than three per cent after the company released its operationa­l update for the 10 months to end-October.

Net operationa­l earnings and headline earnings per share declined by six per cent. Its net result (which takes into account premiums, claim payments and insurance liabilitie­s) from general insurance operations including its 61 per cent stake in Santam – fell by 50 per cent, amid high levels of damage due to electrical power surges and vehicle theft-related claims, combined with the catastroph­ic floods in KwaZulu-Natal.

Its net result from life insurance increased by 23 per cent, asset management by 21 per cent, and credit and structurin­g operations by 17 per cent.

Remained

Sanlam said the operating environmen­t remained difficult, as higher inflation and the resulting interest rate increases hit investment markets and the ability of its clients to ‘commit to new insurance and investment products and retain existing arrangemen­ts’.

Net value of its new life insurance growth, and new life insurance business volumes from that country rose 22 per cent. Its Malaysian business saw growth of nine per cent.

The group said that profit from its life insurance business benefitted from lower mortality claims as the impact from COVID-19 faded away.

Sanlam had a busy year of corporate action.

Recently, it announced plans to merge its African operations outside of South Africa with the German financial giant Allianz to create a new, R33 billion company.

Bought

Also this year, it bought the Alexforbes life book, while selling the Sanlam standalone retirement fund administra­tion business to Alexforbes.

This month, it completed a transactio­n with Absa, which saw the bank exchange its investment management business, Absa Investment­s, for a stake in Sanlam Investment Holdings.

yesterday, Sanlam said that work is under way on ‘integratio­n and realising synergies’ in these businesses.

It recently offered to buy a controllin­g stake in black-owned JSE-listed investment group AfroCentri­c, which owns medical aid administra­tor Medscheme.

Its joint venture with MTN, aYo, also launched at the end of October. aYo currently has over four million active policies and is operationa­l in four countries (Ivory Coast, Ghana, Uganda and Zambia), with three more currently ‘operationa­lising’ (Cameroon, Nigeria and South Africa).

Embark

The group may yet embark on more corporate action, and yesterday confirmed that it is allocating some of its discretion­ary capital to ‘value-enhancing opportunit­ies’ that will boost growth.

“We are evaluating a number of opportunit­ies in line with our strategy and will continue to allocate capital in a discipline­d manner to enhance our long-term growth profile.”

Sanlam’s share price has fallen 13 per cent this year, and is currently trading at around R51.41. Its competitor Old Mutual remained flat yesterday.

 ?? (Courtesy pic) ?? Its net result from life insurance increased by 23 per cent, asset management by 21 per cent, and credit and structurin­g operations by 17 per cent.
(Courtesy pic) Its net result from life insurance increased by 23 per cent, asset management by 21 per cent, and credit and structurin­g operations by 17 per cent.

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